Zochrot presents the first Nakba map in Hebrew.
It includes the localities in the country that were destroyed between the beginning of Zionist colonization and the 1967 war.

The map shows:
601 Palestinian localities that Israel destroyed during the Nakba: 220 of them with less than 100 inhabitants, 415 localities with 100 - 3,000 people, 33 towns and cities with more than 3,000 people;
26 Jewish localities destroyed in 1948 (some of which were re-established that same year);
20 Palestinian localities still existing today, whose inhabitants were expelled temporarily partially during the Nakba;
57 Palestinian localities destroyed during Zionist colonization of the country before 1948;
3 Jewish localities destroyed before 1948 and not re-established;
6 Palestinian localities destroyed in the 1967 war;
194 Syrian localities destroyed by Israel in the 1967 war.

You can click on "The Nakba Map" file above to open it. Click ctrl + to enlarge it (ctrl - to reduce it). It's in Hebrew.

The file "Tables with information about the localities on the map" is on the back side of the printed map. You can open it too. It's in Hebrew.

The map is available at Zochrot for free or for contribution of 10 NIS.
It's possible to order it online and get it by post. For that please pay Zochrot through this page. For delivery in Israel the cost is 20 NIS and abroad is 30 NIS. You can pay in USD: 6 in Israel and 9 abroad. Also in Euro: 4 in Israel and 6 abroad.
After you pay, please inform Debby by e-mail: debby@zochrot.org You'll get the map after some two weeks.

Editor: Eitan Bronstein Aparicio
Assistant Editor: Noga Kadman
Mapping: Ali Abu Riyya (Dar al M'allam)
Publisher: Zochrot
The updated second version of the map was published on March 2015

"For Europe we would constitute over there (in Palestine) part of a bulwark against Asia as well as the advance post of civilization against barbarism. As a neutral state we would have relations with all of Europe, which would guarantee our existence."
Theodore Herzl, Judenstaat, 1896

"The face of the angel of history is turned toward the past. Where we perceived a chain of events, he sees a single catastrophe which keeps piling wreckage ... A storm is blowing from Paradise; it has got caught in his wings with such violence…. This storm irresistibly propels him into the future to which his back is turned, while the pile of debris before him grows skyward. The storm is what we call progress.
Walter Benjamin, Theses on the Philosophy of History, 1940